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Amina Filali, Morocco Rape Victim, Commits Suicide After Forced Marriage To Rapist

By PAUL SCHEMM   03/14/12 01:20 PM ET  AP

RABAT, Morocco -- The case of a 16-year-old girl who killed herself after she was forced to marry her rapist has spurred outrage among Morocco's internet activists and calls for changes to the country's laws.

An online petition, a Facebook page and countless tweets expressed horror over the suicide of Amina Filali, who swallowed rat poison on Saturday to protest her marriage to the man who raped her a year earlier.

Article 475 of the Moroccan penal code allows for the "kidnapper" of a minor to marry his victim to escape prosecution, and it has been used to justify a traditional practice of making a rapist marry his victim to preserve the honor of the woman's family.

"Amina, 16, was triply violated, by her rapist, by tradition and by Article 475 of the Moroccan law," tweeted activist Abadila Maaelaynine.

Abdelaziz Nouaydi, who runs the Adala Assocation for legal reform, said a judge can recommend marriage only in the case of agreement by the victim and both families.

"It is not something that happens a great deal – it is very rare," he said, but admitted that the family of the victim sometimes agrees out of fear that she won't be able to find a husband if it is known she was raped.

The marriage is then pushed on the victim by the families to avoid scandal, said Fouzia Assouli, president of Democratic League for Women's Rights.

"It is unfortunately a recurring phenomenon," she said."We have been asking for years for the cancellation of Article 475 of the penal code which allows the rapist to escape justice."

The victim's father said in an interview with an online Moroccan newspaper that it was the court officials who suggested from the beginning the marriage option when they reported the rape.

"The prosecutor advised my daughter to marry, he said 'go and make the marriage contract,'" said Lahcen Filali in an interview that appeared on goud.ma Tuesday night.

In many societies, the loss of a woman's virginity outside of wedlock is a huge stain of honor on the family.

In many parts of the Middle East, there is a tradition whereby a rapist can escape prosecution if he marries his victim, thereby restoring her honor. There is a similar injunction in the Old Testament's Book of Deuteronomy

Morocco updated its family code in 2004 in a landmark improvement of the situation of women, but activists say there's still room for improvement.

In cases of rape, the burden of proof is often on the victim and if she can't prove she was attacked, a woman risks being prosecuted for debauchery.

"In Morocco, the law protects public morality but not the individual," said Assouli, adding that legislation outlawing all forms of violence against women, including rape within marriage, has been stuck in the government since 2006.

According to the father's interview, the girl was accosted on the street and raped when she was 15, but it was two months before she told her parents.

He said the court pushed the marriage, even though the perpetrator initially refused. He only consented when faced with prosecution. The penalty for rape is between five and 10 years in prison, but rises to 10 to 20 in the case of a minor.

Filali said Amina complained to her mother that her husband was beating her repeatedly during the five months of marriage but that her mother counseled patience.

A Facebook page called "We are all Amina Filali" has been formed and an online petition calling for Morocco to end the practice of marrying rapists and their victims has already gathered more than 1,000 signatures.

Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-273-8255 for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline.
Loading Slideshow...
  • Fouzia Assouli, president of Morocco's Democratic League for Women's Rights and 300 protesters stage a sit-in outside the local court in Larache that had approved the marriage on March 15, 2012. Amina al-Filali, 16, drank rat poison last week in Larache, near Tangiers in the north, after being forced to marry the man who raped her. (Getty)

  • A woman holds a poster reading ' In memory of Amina el Filali: Never more this, for the law against during a sit-in outside the local court in Larache that had approved the marriage on Martch 15, 2012. (Getty)

  • A woman holds a poster reading ' In memory of Amina el Filali: Never more this, for the law against during a sit-in outside the local court in Larache that had approved the marriage on March 15, 2012. (Getty)

  • Hamida (R) and Souad (C), the sister and mother of Amina Al Filali who committed suicide last week attend a sit-in protest outside the local court in Larache that had approved the marriage on March 15, 2012. (Getty)

  • Hamida, the sister of Amina Al Filali who committed suicide last week looks holds a poster of her sisiter during a sit-in protest outside the local court in Larache that had approved the marriage on March 15, 2012. (Getty)

  • Hamida (2ndL), the sister of Amina Al Filali who committed suicide last week looks at Fouzia Assouli (R), president of Morocco's Democratic League for Women's Rights during a sit-in protest outside the local court in Larache that had approved the marriage on March 15, 2012. (Getty)

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05:05 PM on 04/04/2012
As horrible as this story is, I find it heartening that Moroccan women are standing up and fighting for their rights in Amina's name. Saudi women are driving cars and flaunting it with YouTube videos, Egyptian women are demanding political power, and now Moroccan women's fight is invigorated by this tragedy. No Western force needs to stomp in and bomb Islamic nations into a state of equality... I believe the women of those nations will win the fight for equality on their own. It may take decades, but I believe Muslim women will overcome and change their cultures from within.
10:34 PM on 03/31/2012
http://www.avaaz.org/en/forced_to_marry_her_rapist_b/?fp

This is a link to a petition against article 475.
12:00 AM on 03/30/2012
This proves that the entire continent of Africa is screwed up, from North to South and everywhere in between.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jerryengelbach
Working class heritage
05:35 PM on 03/24/2012
Apparently, Amina committed suicide not only because of the rape and forced marriage, but because on top of these, her husband abused her and her own mother refused to help her.
06:50 PM on 03/20/2012
Morocco is an Islamic state where 98% of the people are Muslim. Amina was a Muslim girl under the influence of a Shari'a Law court. WOMEN HAVE NO JUSTICE UNDER SHARI'A LAW. Islamic Shari'a Law a set of barbaric medieval laws that allow crimes to be committed against women. Shari'a Law is now being taught in American Universities, thanks to Title IV, Obama and Elena Kagan. Shari'a Law is the worst nightmare on Earth! It enslaves and oppresses women! Get Educated! STOP SHARI'A LAW!
11:23 AM on 03/22/2012
This story is horrifc! And relates to cultural customs, and not the religion of Islam. Your comments here show you are uneducated about Islam. Morocco is not a country ruled under Shariah Law, if it was, then the rapist would have been executed according to the rules and regulations of Islamic law, & the young girl would have been protected. Unfortunately, everyone let Amina down, the law, the system, the cultural practice and her most horribly, her family. Islamic law would have given justice to Amina and never ever force a rapist to marry his victim.
01:26 PM on 03/23/2012
See Wikipedia http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b2/Countries_with_Sharia_rule.png

Morocco has Shari'a Law courts for Family Law in Morocco. Shari'a Law covers EVERY aspect of the Muslim CULTURE. From politics to religion, food/dress, birth/death, marriage/divorce, etc. Muslim countries/states/communities use Shari'a Law at various levels, some at the State level, some at the municipal level, some in conjunction with other law courts. The reality is that Shari'a Law governs a Muslim's life from the moment they wake up till the moment they go to bed. That means daily life, including religion, politics, everything. To call this simply a "cultural" issue means that YOU are the one who is uneducated.
10:22 PM on 03/22/2012
I doubt you read a single word of this article. This is not Sharia Law we're talking about here. Sharia Law does not come from the "Old Testament's Book of Deuteronomy" which is what is referred to here.
08:11 PM on 04/02/2012
The social origins of the exoneration clause in article 475 lie in the notion, prevalent in traditional (Islamic) milieus in Morocco, that an unmarried girl or woman who has lost her virginity – even through rape – is no longer marriageable and has dishonored her family. Some (Islamic) families believe that marrying the rapist or sexual partner addresses these problems. The prospect of avoiding prison induces the man to consent to marriage.

In rural, conservative Morocco, all the blame and guilt and dishonour of a rape attaches to the victim and the victim's family, not the rapist. And per (Islamic) tradition, the only way to diminish the shame is for the victim to marry the rapist, thereby retrospectively downgrading the act from a rape to something akin to premarital sex: frowned down upon, but not an indelible stain on family honor.

"Article 475, as bad as it is, is only the tip of the iceberg in Morocco’s failure to protect women and girls from violence,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch.

Morocco is 98.7% Muslim. Despite the boast that Morocco is a “‘modern’ state of ‘democratic rights’, Morocco remains an Islamic sovereign state that has codified many principles of Shariah. Any citizen is subject to prosecution for expressing any opinion that is adverse to Islam. In accordance with Shariah, Morocco also requires non-Muslims to formally convert to Islam.
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IndestructibleLioness
Determination that is incorruptible
09:21 PM on 03/19/2012
If Santorum or any of those other GOP nuts get elected as President this will be the futre of America
07:16 PM on 04/03/2012
People like you have no respect for anyone. The hatred and insane gossip you spread is a vile cancer upon America.
07:24 PM on 04/03/2012
Nutballs like you should serve four years in the military and fight terrorists in Afghanistan. Only then would you be eligible to be called the future of America.
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02:43 PM on 03/19/2012
'Honour' violence is acceptable, say one in five young British Asians

A large number of young British Asians support violence against women who 'dishonour' their families, a Panorama investigation will claim today.
The hard-hitting BBC documentary reveals more than two thirds of Asians between the ages of 16 and 34 say communities should live according to 'honour' or 'izzat'.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2117003/Honour-violence-acceptable-say-young-British-Asians.html#ixzz1pabnAzlY
04:01 AM on 03/19/2012
A classic confluence of cutting edge internet with the barbarity of ancient laws. Women / young girls are enslaved, married in polygamy etc., in many parts of the world, but such gruesome facilitation of the primacy of family honor over a young girl's dignity is beyond words. I would maintain despite others exhortations to the contrary, that this is singularly Islamic in character.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ender Wiggin
All Hail Discordia!
11:30 PM on 03/18/2012
stone*
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feed the enemy
Tea & Scorn Flakes - the breakfast of TheoCons
03:50 PM on 03/18/2012
Before we just put this sad tragic case down to Shariah law in a far away land, remember we have 12 and 13 year old girls being forced into Polygamy marriages here. We need to stop this horrible treatment of women worldwide.
03:54 PM on 03/19/2012
polygamy marriages here
=====

Where's 'here?'
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feed the enemy
Tea & Scorn Flakes - the breakfast of TheoCons
12:52 AM on 03/20/2012
That would be the USA. Ever hear of Jeffords?
11:37 PM on 03/21/2012
utah, wake up.
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feed the enemy
Tea & Scorn Flakes - the breakfast of TheoCons
03:47 PM on 03/18/2012
How sad for her. And how sad that if the GOP has it's way, this will be the future of women in the USA.
06:35 PM on 03/18/2012
Good God, a girl is dead. Have some decency.
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feed the enemy
Tea & Scorn Flakes - the breakfast of TheoCons
08:58 PM on 03/18/2012
You are appropriately monikered. To not blast the extreme right Theocracy that did this to her is to disgrace her. You have achieved that low.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pennywhite
03:32 PM on 03/18/2012
Amina's father is as responsible for her suicide as the rapist and the courts. He, more than anyone, had an obligation to protect his child. He failed her tragically and brutally by agreeing to permanently hand her over to the creep who raped her. What a stunning, murderous betrayal of one's own child.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tlcpro
Work is not work when you love what you do.
11:41 AM on 03/18/2012
What really bothers me is the fact that this girl did not ask for sex, she was raped so therefore, the only honor lost was the girl's, or perhaps the rapists since an honorable man does not commit rape. The rapist acted dishonorably, no one else. If it were my daughter, I'd have killed the man myself; I certainly wouldn't allow her to marry him.
11:34 PM on 03/18/2012
How was her honor lost? She did not ask for this, she did nothing wrong. The honor that was lost was her rapists.
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kmcloonjr
Try seeing the other side of the issue
01:59 PM on 03/19/2012
The rapist had no honor to begin with. I agree with ticpro on one issue. I'd kill the rapist of my daughter as well.
11:41 PM on 03/21/2012
the real problem is that Muslim culture does not have a true understanding of honor; because they do not hold the perpetrator accountable, but instead blame the victim; their entire culture is permeated with this form of deranged insanity regarding a false 'honor' code that is really just a bloated, thousand-year-old tradition rooted in the gang mentality of the initial founder of the culture.
09:58 AM on 03/18/2012
She was raped, thrown under a bus by her family and country, beaten by her 'husband'-- hate to say it, but what choice did she have? In a matter of time, she would have become a mother and her children would have been subjected to the same cycle. Sad. So sad. I wonder if her parents feel any remorse?